Deeper Analysis: All 33 Children Transported by Arrested Baptists Had Family

February 23, 2010 in Haiti and Orphans | Comments (5)

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The AP this weekend reported that all 33 of the children being transported out of Haiti by the arrested American group had living relatives.  This finding is being used, appropriately, to broadcast one very important point:  the importance of family reunification efforts.  Most children classified as “unaccompanied minors” following a natural disaster do have living relatives.  Clearly, after immediate physical needs are met, first priority for such children should always be reuniting them with families if at all possible.

However, several addition observations should also be made that the headlines seem to miss:

1) The children’s families sent them with the group voluntarily. As the Miami Herald described, “A reporter’s visit Saturday to the rubble-strewn Citron slum, where 13 of the children lived, led to their parents, all of whom said they turned their youngsters over to the missionary group voluntarily in hopes of getting them to safety.”  This doesn’t excuse errors made by the group, but it does set the matter in clearer context.

2) The primary issue wasn’t adoption. Prior to traveling to Haiti, the group expressed hope on their website that they’d eventually be able to enable adoptions from the orphanage they planned to build in the Dominican Republic.   However, there’s no indication the group intended to send children that still had living parents off to the U.S.  Nor would U.S. law have allowed them to do so without thorough documentation.  It appears this general portrayal—mostly by rumor and innuendo—was promoted by groups that wanted to associate adoption with amateurism or bad actors.

3) It’s unhelpful to equate this effort with human trafficking. Circumventing Haiti’s laws to get the children to care in the Dominican Republic was both wrong and unwise.  However, to equate these actions with “human trafficking”—one of the most vile crimes imaginable, often perpetrated with the goal of slavery or sexual exploitation—is very unhelpful.  It casts far worse light on the Baptist group and far better light on traffickers than is deserved.

4) This is certainly not the worst thing happening in Haiti. Right now, children are experience untold evil within Haiti, from amputations and severe hunger to household slavery and worse.  Even the U.N. has affirmed that it is “failing to adequately manage the relief effort.”  This isn’t necessarily an indictment of the U.N.  It’s just that responding to disaster, especially in the developing world, is always going to be difficult and messy.   

5) Broad misunderstanding of the term orphan. The NY Times article on the issue began with the words, “There is not one orphan among the 33 children that a U.S. Baptist group tried to take from Haiti…”  The U.N. definition of orphan, however, includes children that have lost one or both parents.  Thus, while the children did have living relatives, many of them were—by U.N. definition—orphans.  This isn’t a particularly important point, aside from the fact that the decision by the U.N. to use this definition of an orphan for all of its official statistics has created widespread misunderstanding.

Comments (5)

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  1. Comment by Janey DeMeo, ORPHANS FIRST — February 23, 2010 @ 11:27 am

    Thank you for presenting this balanced & informative perspective. We certainly have much to learn from this situation. I addressed some points my article, Lessons from Haiti & Helping Haiti’s Orphans, here:
    http://janey-demeo.blogspot.com/2010/02/lessons-from-haiti-helping-haitis.html

    An edited version was published here:
    http://www.assistnews.net/Stories/2010/s10020071.htm

    blessings,
    Janey DeMeo — http://www.orphansfirst.org

  2. Comment by catalina555 — February 23, 2010 @ 1:11 pm

    You know, you can try to spin these crimes any way you want to justify the unjustifiable, but let me just make one comment about #4 – what these fake missionaries did might not be the “worst thing happening in Haiti” – but it is certainly the worst thing happening to THOSE 33 CHILDREN stolen from their parents by the Haiti 10!!!

    Why do you care more about these criminal Baptists (that even you admit were “wrong” and “unwise”) than the families they tore apart? How is that part of God’s plan?

  3. Comment by Elizabeth — February 23, 2010 @ 2:14 pm

    Wow, there is a lot of explaining away the behavior of the Haiti 10. But I wonder if we looked at this through another lens, what we would think….WWJD? Would he have taken the 33 children, or instead tried to help the families…I think they were trying to take some of those children out to then make money off them by adopting them out. Shame on them. And then there is the comment about the parents giving their children to the Haiti 10. Well yes, when they were told their kids would be living close by in the DR, to be educated and cared for, where they could visit them…what would you have done? Sadly, that was not the truth…there was no school, or even an orphanage.
    So let’s not equate this to human trafficking…lets equate this to further traumatizing the children and their parents, on top of the trauma of the earthquake. Still a horrible thing to do to those children and parents.
    Under the WWJD lens, nothing these people did was good…to try and spin it any other way is wrong.

  4. Pingback by Deeper Analysis: All 33 Children Transported by Arrested Baptists … | Drakz Free Online Service — February 24, 2010 @ 2:28 am

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  5. Comment by Dawn Davenport — February 26, 2010 @ 7:43 pm

    Thank you for your clarity. I have been saying the same thing on my blog titled The Road to Hell, Haiti and the Baptist. http://www.creatingafamily.org/blog/adoption-domestic-adoption-international-adoption-embryo-adoption-foster-care-adoption/road-hell-haiti-baptists/ Like you, I am not excusing their behavior, but when viewed in perspective it was misguided, but not evil.

    Glad to have found you.

    Dawn Davenport
    Host of radio show Creating a Family: Talk about Adoption and Infertility

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